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Take action to end the Gaza blockade

Here’s what Mike Merryman-Lotze of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) has to say about his visit to Gaza: “During a visit I made to Gaza several years ago I asked a group of young adults participating in one of AFSC’s programs in Gaza what I should tell people in the United States about them and their lives.

“Their responses: Tell them that Gaza is beautiful; tell them that despite the current situation we would never want to live anywhere else; tell them that we dream, laugh, and love like all other people; tell them that we are not victims.

“[T]hese young people’s words of hope and love … speak to those aspects of Gaza – the beauty of its landscape, the vibrancy of its streets, and the incredible generosity and spirit of its people – that I, too, have come to love.

“Unfortunately, I can’t only put forward these messages of hope and love. I must also speak about Israel’s continued military occupation of Gaza and the six-year-old Gaza blockade.”

Since 2007, the residents of Gaza, now numbering 1.7 million people, more than half of whom are children, have lived under a tight blockade that severely restricts the movement of goods and people.

According to United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, as a result of the blockade:

Fewer than 200 people per day (on average) were allowed out of Gaza via Israel in the first half of 2013.

57 percent of Gaza households are food insecure and approximately 80 percent receive some form of food assistance.

Due to fuel shortages there are power outages for up to 12 hours per day.

Only 25 percent of households in Gaza receive running water every day, and then only for a few hours.

Over 90 percent of the water extracted from the Gaza aquifer is unsafe for human consumption.

Less than one truckload of goods per day (on average) was allowed out of Gaza during the first half of 2013.

The blockade of Gaza has not increased security for Israel, and it has not increased the prospect of peace between Israelis and Palestinians. What it has done is increase poverty and suffering among the civilian population of Gaza.

Tell your representative and your senators that the blockade must end.

While Israel bears primary responsibility for ending the blockade, the United States government must also be held accountable for its continued support for the blockade, because of its provision of unconditional military assistance to Israel, and the political cover it gives Israel at the UN.

Join us in demanding that the U.S. government end its support for Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territory, and that it support the immediate, unconditional, and complete lifting of the Gaza blockade.